Efficiently handling communications in wireless telecommunications systems

ABSTRACT

A method of operating a terminal device to receive user plane data from a network infrastructure equipment in a wireless telecommunications network when the terminal device is not in an active radio resource connected mode, the method comprising: receiving paging message signalling from the network infrastructure equipment, wherein the paging message signalling comprises an indication the network infrastructure equipment has user plane data for transmission to the terminal device while the terminal device is not in an active radio resource connected mode; determining from the paging message signalling a set of radio resources on which the user plane data is to be transmitted by the network infrastructure equipment to the terminal device; and receiving the user plane data from the network infrastructure equipment using the determined set of radio resources while the terminal device is not in an active radio resource connected mode.

BACKGROUND Field

The present disclosure relates to telecommunications apparatus andmethods.

Description of Related Art

The “background” description provided herein is for the purpose ofgenerally presenting the context of the disclosure. Work of thepresently named inventors, to the extent it is described in thisbackground section, as well as aspects of the description which may nototherwise qualify as prior art at the time of filing, are neitherexpressly or impliedly admitted as prior art against the presentinvention.

Recent generation mobile telecommunication systems, such as those basedon the 3GPP defined UMTS and Long Term Evolution (LTE) architectures,are able to support a wider range of services than simple voice andmessaging services offered by previous generations of mobiletelecommunication systems. For example, with the improved radiointerface and enhanced data rates provided by LTE systems, a user isable to enjoy high data-rate applications such as mobile video streamingand mobile video conferencing that would previously only have beenavailable via a fixed line data connection. In addition to supportingthese kinds of more sophisticated services and devices, it is alsoproposed for newer generation mobile telecommunication systems tosupport less complex services and devices which make use of the reliableand wide ranging coverage of newer generation mobile telecommunicationsystems without necessarily needing to rely on the high data ratesavailable in such systems.

Future wireless communications networks will therefore be expected toroutinely and efficiently support communications with a wider range ofdevices associated with a wider range of data traffic profiles and typesthan current systems are optimised to support. For example it isexpected future wireless communications networks will be expected toefficiently support communications with devices including reducedcomplexity devices, machine type communication (MTC) devices, highresolution video displays, virtual reality headsets and so on. Some ofthese different types of devices may be deployed in very large numbers,for example low complexity devices for supporting the “Internet ofThings”, and may typically be associated with the transmission ofrelatively small amounts of data with relatively high latency tolerance.

In view of this there is expected to be a desire for future wirelesscommunications networks, for example those which may be referred to as5G or new radio (NR) system/new radio access technology (RAT) systems,as well as future iterations/releases of existing systems, toefficiently support connectivity for a wide range of devices associatedwith different applications and different characteristic data trafficprofiles.

One example area of current interest in this regard includes theso-called “Internet of Things”, or IoT for short. The 3GPP has proposedin Release 13 of the 3GPP specifications to develop technologies forsupporting narrowband (NB)-IoT and so-called enhanced MTC (eMTC)operation using a LTE/4G wireless access interface and wirelessinfrastructure. More recently there have been proposals to build onthese ideas in Release 14 of the 3GPP specifications with so-calledenhanced NB-IoT (eNB-IoT) and further enhanced MTC (feMTC), and inRelease 15 of the 3GPP specifications with so-called further enhancedNB-IoT (feNB-IoT) and even further enhanced MTC (efeMTC). See, forexample, [1], [2], [3], [4]. The IoT is further enhanced in 3GPP by theintroduction of two additional Release 16 Work Items, namely A-MTC(Additional Machine Type Communications Enhancements) [5] and A-NB-IoT(Additional Enhancement for Narrowband Internet of Things) [6].

At least some devices making use of these technologies are expected tobe low complexity and inexpensive devices requiring relativelyinfrequent communication of relatively low bandwidth data. It is furtherexpected some of these types of device may be required to operate inareas of relatively poor coverage, for example, in a basement or otherlocation with relatively high penetration loss (e.g. for smart metertype applications), or in remote locations (e.g. for remote monitoringapplications), and this has given rise to proposals for enhancingcoverage, for example using repeat transmissions.

The increasing use of different types of terminal devices associatedwith different traffic profiles and requirements for coverageenhancement gives rise to new challenges for efficiently handlingcommunications in wireless telecommunications systems that need to beaddressed.

SUMMARY

Respective aspects and features of the present disclosure are defined inthe appended claims.

It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description andthe following detailed description are exemplary, but are notrestrictive, of the present technology. The described embodiments,together with further advantages, will be best understood by referenceto the following detailed description taken in conjunction with theaccompanying drawings.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

A more complete appreciation of the disclosure and many of the attendantadvantages thereof will be readily obtained as the same becomes betterunderstood by reference to the following detailed description whenconsidered in connection with the accompanying drawings wherein likereference numerals designate identical or corresponding parts throughoutthe several views, and wherein:

FIG. 1 schematically represents some aspects of a LTE-type wirelesstelecommunication system which may be configured to operate inaccordance with certain embodiments of the present disclosure;

FIG. 2 schematically represents steps in a paging-initiated randomaccess procedure in a wireless telecommunication network;

FIG. 3 schematically represents some aspects of a paging procedure in awireless telecommunications system;

FIG. 4 schematically represents some aspects of a wirelesstelecommunication system in accordance with an embodiment of thedisclosure;

FIG. 5 schematically represents a process for indicatingmobile-terminated early data transmission (EDT) in a wirelesstelecommunication system according to an embodiment of the disclosure;

FIG. 6 schematically represents a process for indicatingmobile-terminated EDT in a wireless telecommunication system accordingto an embodiment of the disclosure;

FIG. 7 schematically represents a first UE associated with a first EDTidentifier moving from a first communication cell to a secondcommunication cell containing a second UE also associated with the firstEDT identifier according to an embodiment of the disclosure;

FIG. 8 schematically represents an arrangement, in time, of pagingoccasions with a predefined subset being available for providing anindication of mobile-terminated (i.e. downlink) EDT in a wirelesstelecommunication system according to an embodiment of the disclosure;

FIGS. 9 to 11 schematically represent approaches for communicatingmobile-terminated (i.e. downlink) EDT data in a wirelesstelecommunication system according to embodiments of the disclosure;

FIG. 12 is a flow chart schematically representing some operatingaspects of a terminal device (UE) in accordance with certain embodimentsof the disclosure; and

FIG. 13 is a flow chart schematically representing some operatingaspects of a base station (network infrastructure equipment) inaccordance with certain embodiments of the disclosure.

DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLE EMBODIMENTS

FIG. 1 provides a schematic diagram illustrating some basicfunctionality of a mobile telecommunications network/system 100operating generally in accordance with LTE principles, but which mayalso support other radio access technologies, and which may be adaptedto implement embodiments of the disclosure as described herein. Variouselements of FIG. 1 and certain aspects of their respective modes ofoperation are well-known and defined in the relevant standardsadministered by the 3GPP® body, and also described in many books on thesubject, for example, Holma H. and Toskala A [7]. It will be appreciatedthat operational aspects of the telecommunications networks discussedherein which are not specifically described (for example in relation tospecific communication protocols and physical channels for communicatingbetween different elements) may be implemented in accordance with anyknown techniques, for example according to the relevant standards andknown proposed modifications and additions to the relevant standards.

The network includes a plurality of base stations 101A, B, C connectedto a core network 102. Each base station provides a coverage area 103A,B, C (i.e. a communication cell) within which data can be communicatedto and from various terminal devices 104. Terminal devices may also bereferred to as mobile stations, user equipment (UE), user terminals,mobile radios, communications devices, and so forth. Base stations,which are an example of network infrastructure equipment/network accessnodes, may also be referred to as transceiver stations/nodeBs/e-nodeBs,g-nodeBs and so forth. Furthermore, it will be appreciated the termsbase station and cell may also sometimes be used interchangeably, forexample, the process of a terminal device connecting to the radio accesspart of a wireless telecommunications system might be referred to asaccessing a cell or accessing a base station. Nonetheless, it will beappreciated in some cases the physical apparatus comprising a basestation may comprise equipment for supporting more than onecommunication cell and in such cases it can still be appropriate to drawa distinction between base stations and cells. In this regard differentterminology is often associated with different generations of wirelesstelecommunications systems for elements providing broadly comparablefunctionality. However, certain embodiments of the disclosure may beequally implemented in different generations of wirelesstelecommunications systems, and for simplicity certain terminology maybe used regardless of the underlying network architecture. That is tosay, the use of a specific term in relation to certain exampleimplementations is not intended to indicate these implementations arelimited to a certain generation of network that may be most associatedwith that particular terminology.

In terms of basic operation, data are transmitted from base stations101A, B, C to terminal devices 104 within their respective coverageareas 103 via a radio downlink and from terminal devices 104 to the basestations 101A, B, C via a radio uplink. The core network 102 routes datato and from terminal devices 104 via respective base stations 101A, B, Cand provides functions such as authentication, mobility management,charging and so on. To this end, the core network (CN) 102 comprises amobility management entity (MME) 105 and a serving gateway (S-GW) entityand a packet data network gateway (P-GW) entity. For simplicity theserving gateway entity and packet data network gateway are schematicallyrepresented in FIG. 1 as a single combined (S-GW/P-GW) gateway entity106.

It is known for a group of base stations (with associated cells) to belogically grouped together into a so-called tracking area (TA). In FIG.1 the communication cells 103A and 103B associated with base stations101A and 101B are schematically represented as belonging to a trackingarea 107. For this particular example it is assumed the communicationcell 103C associated with base station 101C belongs to a differenttracking area, although this other tracking area is not represented inthe figure. The sizes of tracking areas are typically not specified inwireless telecommunications system specifications. However, a typicaltracking area in an LTE-based network might be expected to includeperhaps twenty base stations/cells, but could be more/fewer according tothe implementation at hand. Tracking areas play a role in paging.

While certain embodiments may be generally described herein in relationto the network architecture represented in FIG. 1, it will beappreciated corresponding approaches may equally be adopted in networksconforming to other overall configurations, for example configurationsassociated with proposed approaches for new radio access technology(RAT), NR, wireless mobile telecommunications networks/systems. A newRAT network may comprise communication cells that each comprise acontrolling node in communication with a core network component and aplurality of distributed units (radio access nodes/remote transmissionand reception points (TRPs)) within the cell. The distributed units maybe responsible for providing the radio access interface for terminaldevices connected to the NR network. Each distributed unit in a cell hasa coverage area (radio access footprint) and the aggregation of thecoverage areas of the distributed units defines the coverage of thecommunication cell. Each distributed unit includes transceiver circuitryfor transmission and reception of wireless signals and processorcircuitry configured to control the respective distributed units. Interms of broad top-level functionality, the core network component ofsuch a new RAT telecommunications system may be broadly considered tocorrespond with the core network 102 represented in FIG. 1, and therespective controlling nodes and their associated distributed units/TRPsmay be broadly considered to provide functionality corresponding to thebase stations of FIG. 1. Thus, the term network infrastructureequipment/access node may be used to encompass these elements and moreconventional base-station type elements of wireless telecommunicationssystems. Depending on the application at hand the responsibility forscheduling transmissions which are scheduled on the radio interfacebetween the respective distributed units and the terminal devices maylie with the controlling node/centralised unit and/or the distributedunits/TRPs. A terminal device operating in this proposed new RATarchitecture may thus exchange signalling with a first controlling nodevia one or more of the distributed units associated with the controllingnode. In some implementations the involvement of the distributed unitsin routing communications from the terminal device to a controlling node(controlling unit) may be transparent to the terminal device. It willfurther be appreciated this example represents merely one example of aproposed architecture for a new RAT telecommunications system in whichapproaches in accordance with the principles described herein may beadopted, and the functionality disclosed herein may also be applied inrespect of wireless telecommunications systems having differentarchitectures.

Thus certain embodiments of the disclosure as discussed herein may beimplemented in wireless telecommunication systems/networks according tovarious different architectures, such as the example architecture shownin FIG. 1. It will be appreciated the specific wirelesstelecommunications architecture in any given implementation is not ofprimary significance to the principles described herein. In this regard,certain embodiments of the disclosure may be described generally in thecontext of communications between network infrastructureequipment/access nodes and a terminal device, wherein the specificnature of the network infrastructure equipment/access node and theterminal device will depend on the radio network infrastructure for theimplementation at hand. For example, in some scenarios the networkinfrastructure equipment/access node may comprise a base station, suchas an LTE-type base station 101A, B, C as shown in FIG. 1 which isadapted to provide functionality in accordance with the principlesdescribed herein, and in other examples the network infrastructureequipment may comprise a control unit/controlling node and/or a TRP in anew RAT architecture of the kind discussed above.

In wireless telecommunications networks, such as LTE type networks,there are different Radio Resource Control (RRC) modes for terminaldevices. For example, it is common to support an RRC idle mode(RRC_IDLE) and an RRC connected mode (RRC_CONNECTED). A terminal devicein the idle mode may move to connected mode, for example because itneeds to transmit uplink data or respond to a paging request, byundertaking a random access procedure. The random access procedureinvolves the terminal device transmitting a preamble on a physicalrandom access channel and so the procedure is commonly referred to as aRACH or PRACH procedure/process.

Thus a conventional way for a terminal device (UE) in RRC idle mode toexchange data with a network involves the terminal device firstperforming an RRC connection procedure (random access procedure) withthe network. The RRC connection procedure involves the UE initiallytransmitting a random access request message (which may be triggeredautonomously by the UE determining it has data to transmit to thenetwork or in response to the network instructing the UE to connect tothe network by paging). This is followed by RRC control message exchangebetween the network and UE. After establishing an RRC connection andexchanging the relevant data, the UE may then perform RRC disconnectionand move back into idle mode for power saving. This conventionalapproach may for convenience be referred to herein as a legacy approach.

The random access procedure can be relatively inefficient if the amountof data to be communicated with the network is relatively small, forexample in terms of signalling overhead and associated UE power usage.There have therefore been proposals for a UE to communicatehigher-layer/user plane data with the network during the RRC connectionprocedure itself. One approach for this is referred to as Early DataTransmission (EDT) and allows the UE to transmit and/or receive userplane data during the Random Access process whilst in idle mode (or moregenerally while not in an active radio resource connection mode),thereby communicating the relevant data without the need to complete theestablishment of an RRC connection, which can be particularly helpfulfor infrequent and short messages types of traffic.

FIG. 2 is a ladder diagram that schematically shows message exchangebetween a UE and an eNB in a typical random access procedure toestablish an RRC connection, for example in an LTE-based network. It isassumed for this example the random access procedure is networktriggered, for example because the network has downlink data fortransmission to the terminal device. Thus, the process starts in step T1with the eNB transmitting a paging message to the UE. The UE responds instep T2 by transmitting a random access request on a physical randomaccess channel (PRACH in an LTE context), i.e. a random access preamble(RACH preamble), to the eNB. In step T3, when the eNB detects thispreamble it will respond with a Random Access Response message (RAR),which is also known as Message 2. The RAR is scheduled by downlinkcontrol information (DCI) carried on a physical downlink controlchannel, e.g. MPDCCH in an LTE implementation for machine typecommunication (MTC) traffic, in a predefined Common Search Space (CSS).The RAR itself is transmitted on a physical downlink shared channel(PDSCH) resource allocated via the DCI. The DCI is addressed to anRA-RNTI (random access radio network temporary identifier) which isderived from the time and frequency resources used to transmit thepreamble in step T2, and the RAR will indicate which preamble the eNBhas detected and is responding to. It may be noted it is possible thatmultiple UEs may transmit a random access request using the same PRACHpreamble and at the same time and frequency resources. The RAR of stepT3 also contains an uplink grant for the preamble the network isresponding to so that the UE that transmitted the preamble may use thisuplink grant to transmit an RRC Connection Request message, also knownas Message 3 to the eNB, in step T4. Message 3 also contains anindication of an identifier, ID, for the UE (e.g. a C-RNTI (cell radionetwork temporary identifier) or S-TMSI (system architecture evolution(SAE) temporary mobile subscriber identity) or a 40-bit random numbergenerated by the UE. The eNB will respond to Message 3, in step T5, withMessage 4 which carries an RRC Connection Setup message. For the casewhere multiple UEs use the same preamble, Message 4 provides contentionresolution functionality, for example using a terminal deviceidentifier, such as C-RNTI or S-TMSI, transmitted in Message 3 (when aUE receives a Message 4 that contains a portion of the Message 3containing the UE ID that it transmitted earlier, it knows that therewas no contention on the Message 3 that it had transmitted). The RRCconnection is complete when the UE transmits Message 5 in step T6containing a RRC Connection Setup Complete message.

Although FIG. 2 schematically shows a network-initiated random accessprocedure, the same approach is taken for a UE-initiated random accessprocedure except the UE does not receive a paging message in step T1,and instead the UE autonomously determines it should transmit the PRACHpreamble in step T2.

As noted above, certain implementations of wireless telecommunicationssystems may include terminal devices, for example IoT/MTC devices, thattypically provide relatively infrequent reports and receive relativelyinfrequent commands from the network, e.g. sensors and utility metersand other such IoT devices. Consequently some UEs may be expected to bein a power saving mode or long DRX (discontinuous reception) for most ofthe time to conserve battery power. Hence, when there is data totransmit or receive, due to the long DRX, the UE may need to reacquiresynchronization, update system information and connect to the network toperform the data exchange. This process can take a relatively long timeand consume a relatively large amount of battery power. Recognisingthis, in Release 15 of the 3GPP standards Early Data Transmission (EDT)was introduced in the uplink. Uplink EDT allows a UE to transmit data tothe network during the RRC connection process itself. It is proposed theuplink EDT is transmitted using Message 3 of the RACH procedure, withthe UE moving back to idle mode after Message 4. This approach can helpavoid the need to establish an RRC connection (i.e. complete a RACHprocedure), and can hence help reduce power consumption.

In Release 16 of the 3GPP standards which propose A-MTC (AdditionalMachine Type Communications Enhancements) and A-NB-IoT (AdditionalEnhancement for Narrowband Internet of Things), EDT is further developedto include Mobile Terminated (MT) data, i.e. downlink EDT. Similarly touplink EDT in Release 15, downlink EDT can be used by the network totransmit data to the UE without the need to establish an RRC connection.For MT data, the network initiates the RRC connection process by pagingthe UE to trigger a Random Access procedure as shown in FIG. 2.

FIG. 3 is a signalling ladder diagram representing some principles of apaging procedure corresponding to step T1 in FIG. 2 for a terminaldevice 104 in an RRC Idle mode in the LTE-type network schematicallyrepresented in FIG. 1. FIG. 3 schematically represents signalling andoperating functions associated with the terminal device 104, the basestations 101A, 101B comprising the tracking area 107, and the MME 105and gateway 106 of the core network 102.

For the sake of this example it is assumed the terminal device 104initially attaches to the network through base station 101A within thetracking area 107 before entering an idle mode. Furthermore, it isassumed the terminal device 104 has not moved to a different trackingarea and so has not provided any tracking area update. Thus, the corenetwork 102 will assume the terminal device is located somewhere withintracking area 107 (i.e. somewhere within the coverage areas ofcommunication cells 103A and 1038 which comprise the tracking area 107).

Thus, referring to FIG. 3, in step S1 the terminal device 104 is poweredon.

In step S2 (comprising sub-steps S2 a, S2 b and S2 c), and in accordancewith conventional techniques, an RRC connection procedure (in thisexample an initial attach procedure) is initiated by the terminal devicewith signalling exchanged between the terminal device 104, the basestation 101A, the MME 105, and gateway 106 as schematically representedin the figure. For LTE this signalling comprises RRC connection setupsignalling from the terminal device 104 to the base station 101A (stepS2 a), attach request signalling from the base station 101A to the MME105 (step S2 b), and GPRS tunnel protocol session request signalling(step S2 c).

As is well known, the specific base station through which the terminaldevice initially attaches may be determined from reference signalmeasurements, and so forth, whereby the terminal device determines whichbase station is most appropriate (cell selection).

In step S3 the core network assigns an IP address for the terminaldevice. From this point the core network recognises the existence of theterminal device and keeps track of its location at a tracking arealevel. Thus, in this particular example, the core network identifies theterminal device as being within tracking area 107 (because the terminaldevice has accessed the network through base station 101A, which iswithin tracking area 107).

Although not shown in FIG. 3 in the interests of simplicity, the basestation 101A to which the terminal device 104 sends RRC connection setupsignalling in step S2 and the terminal device 104 will exchange furthersignalling to allow the base station 101A to establish capabilityinformation for the terminal device 104. For example, the base station101A will transmit a UE capability enquiry and the terminal device willrespond with a UE capability information message.

As schematically represented in step S4, the terminal device havingattached to the network and exchanged capability information with thebase station, enters RRC idle mode. As is conventional, the base station101A will discard the UE capability information and other contextinformation associated with the terminal device at this stage.

Thus steps S1 to S4 in FIG. 3 schematically represent the process for aterminal device being switched on and attaching to the network beforeentering idle mode. This represents the starting point for theprocessing represented in FIG. 2.

In step S5 the MME 105 recognises that a paging instance has arisen forthe terminal device 104. The specific reason for the paging requirementis not significant, and may, for example be because a third party isseeking to place a telephone call to the terminal device 104 or becausean application server has data to communicate to the terminal device.

The MME 105 in the core network 102 can recognise the terminal device islocated in one of the communication cells 103A and 103B which comprisetracking area 107, but the MME 105 does not know which one. Accordingly,the MME 105 sends a paging request message over the S1-AP interface toeach of the base stations associated with the tracking area 107. Thus,in this example the MME 105 sends paging request messages to both basestations 101A and 101B, as schematically represented in steps S6 and S7.The MME 105 does not send a paging request message to the base station101C serving communication cell 103C because communication cell 103C isnot within tracking area 107 in which the terminal device is taken asbeing located.

The base stations receiving a paging request message from the MME 105,in this case base stations 101A and 101B, are configured to transmitpaging signalling to seek to establish contact with the terminal device104. This is schematically represented in FIG. 3 in steps S8 and S9.

It is assumed for this example the terminal device has remained withinthe coverage area 103A of base station 101A and so receives the pagingsignalling transmitted in step S9 by base station 101A, and respondsaccordingly, as schematically indicated in step S10, for example byinitiating a random access procedure to establish an RRC connection tothe network. Thus steps S9 and S10 in FIG. 3 correspond with steps T1and T2 in FIG. 2. The paging signalling sent in step S8 by base station101B is not received by the terminal device 104 and so is in effectwasted signalling.

Following step S10, the various elements represented in FIG. 3 maycontinue to exchange signalling in accordance with conventionaltechniques, for example depending on why the paging instance arose instep S5.

Thus, FIG. 3 schematically represents conventional principles for paginga terminal device in RRC idle mode in a wireless telecommunicationssystem.

Idle mode terminal devices are conventionally configured to seek pagingmessages periodically. For terminal devices operating in a discontinuousreception (DRX) mode this occurs each time they wake up for their DRXactive time. Paging signals for a specific terminal device aretransmitted in defined frames (Paging Frames)/sub-frames (PagingOccasions) which are derived from the International Mobile SubscriberIdentifier (IMSI) of the terminal device, as well as paging related DRXparameters established in system information transmitted within thenetwork.

In a conventional LTE-based system, a terminal device thus receives andchecks the contents of specific sub-frames (paging occasions) inspecific frames (paging frames) to look for paging signalling. Forexample, in accordance with the standards set out in ETSI TS 136 321V15.2.0 (2018-07)/3GPP TS 36.321 version 15.2.0 Release 15 [8], a PagingFrame (PF) is a downlink radio frame which may contain one or morePaging Occasion(s) (PO), where a Paging Occasion is a sub-frame in whichthere may be paging signalling. Paging signalling is conveyed on aphysical downlink shared channel (PDSCH) on resources identified from anallocation message addressed to a paging radio network temporaryidentifier (P-RNTI) and conveyed on a physical downlink control channel(PDCCH). P-RNTI is a common identifier for all terminal devices (e.g.set at FFFE in hexa-decimal for the standard defined by ETSI TS 136 321V15.2.0 (2018-07)/3GPP TS 36.321 version 15.2.0 Release 15 [8]). Allterminal devices check whether PDCCH at the specific PF/PO includesP-RNTI or not. If there is a PDSCH allocation addressed to P-RNTI in therelevant subframe, the terminal device proceeds to seek to receive anddecode the paging messages transmitted on the allocated resources onPDSCH. The UE then checks the list of IDs contained in the paging recordlist in the received paging message, to determine whether the listcontains an ID corresponding to itself (for example P-TMSI or IMSI), andif so initiates a paging response.

The paging message represented in step T1 of FIG. 2 and in step S9 ofFIG. 3 is an RRC (radio resource control) message. As for other RRCmessages, the paging message is ASN.1 (abstract syntax notation)encoded. The following table provides details of the 3GPP Release 15structure of the paging message in an LTE context.

Paging Message

-- ASN1START Paging ::= SEQUENCE {  pagingRecordList PagingRecordListOPTIONAL, -- Need ON  systemInfoModification ENUMERATED {true} OPTIONAL,-- Need ON  etws-Indication ENUMERATED {true} OPTIONAL, -- Need ON nonCriticalExtension Paging-v890-IEs OPTIONAL } Paging-v890-IEs ::=SEQUENCE {  lateNonCriticalExtension OCTET STRING OPTIONAL, nonCriticalExtension Paging-v920-IEs OPTIONAL } Paging-v920-IEs ::=SEQUENCE {  cmas-Indication-r9 ENUMERATED {true} OPTIONAL, -- Need ON nonCriticalExtension Paging-v1130-IEs OPTIONAL } Paging-v1130-IEs ::=SEQUENCE {  eab-ParamModification-r11 ENUMERATED {true} OPTIONAL, --Need ON  nonCriticalExtension Paging-v1310-IEs OPTIONAL }Paging-v1310-IEs ::= SEQUENCE {  redistributionIndication-r13 ENUMERATED{true} OPTIONAL, --Need ON  systemInfoModification-eDRX-r13 ENUMERATED{true} OPTIONAL, -- Need ON  nonCriticalExtension SEQUENCE { } OPTIONAL} PagingRecordList ::= SEQUENCE (SIZE (1..maxPageRec)) OF PagingRecordPagingRecord ::= SEQUENCE {  ue-Identity PagingUE-Identity,  cn-DomainENUMERATED {ps, cs},  ... } PagingUE-Identity ::= CHOICE {  s-TMSIS-TMSI,  imsi IMSI,  ... } IMSI ::= SEQUENCE (SIZE (6..21)) OFIMSI-Digit IMSI-Digit ::= INTEGER (0..9) -- ASN1STOP

Paging Field Descriptions

cmas-Indication: If present: indication of a CMAS notification.cn-Domain: Indicates the origin of paging.eab-ParamModification: If present: indication of an EAB parameters(SIB14) modification.etws-Indication: If present: indication of an ETWS primary notificationand/or ETWS secondary notification.imsi: The International Mobile Subscriber Identity, a globally uniquepermanent subscriber identity, see TS 23.003 [27]. The first elementcontains the first IMSI digit, the second element contains the secondIMSI digit and so on.redistributionIndication: If present: indication to trigger E-UTRANinter-frequency redistribution procedure as specified in TS 36.304 [4,5.2.4.10]systemInfoModification: If present: indication of a BCCH modificationother than SIB10, SIB11, SIB12 and SIB14. This indication does not applyto UEs using eDRX cycle longer than the BCCH modification period.systemInfoModification-eDRX: If present: indication of a BCCHmodification other than SIB10, SIB11, SIB12 and SIB14. This indicationapplies only to UEs using eDRX cycle longer than the BCCH modificationperiod.ue-Identity: Provides the NAS identity of the UE that is being paged.

Although the above description has summarised existing LTE pagingprocedures, it is expected that some broadly similar principles may beadopted for future wireless telecommunications systems, and theinventors have recognised there are ways in which these procedures maybe modified to provide enhanced functionality, both for existingwireless telecommunication network architectures and wirelesstelecommunications network architectures based on newer radio accesstechnologies (RATs), such as 5G networks.

Downlink EDT has been proposed in 3GPP Release 15 and a number ofimplementations have been described, for example in WO2018/029001 [9]and WO2018/114258 [11].

Nonetheless, there are still areas where developments of the proposedschemes for downlink/mobile terminated EDT are needed.

FIG. 4 schematically shows a telecommunications system 500 according toan embodiment of the present disclosure. The telecommunications system500 in this example is based broadly around an LTE-type architecture. Assuch many aspects of the operation of the telecommunicationssystem/network 500 are known and understood and are not described herein detail in the interest of brevity. Operational aspects of thetelecommunications system 500 which are not specifically describedherein may be implemented in accordance with any known techniques, forexample according to the current LTE-standards.

The telecommunications system 500 comprises a core network part (evolvedpacket core) 502 coupled to a radio network part. The radio network partcomprises a base station (evolved-nodeB) 504 coupled to a plurality ofterminal devices. In this example, two terminal devices are shown,namely a first terminal device 506 and a second terminal device 508. Itwill of course be appreciated that in practice the radio network partmay comprise a plurality of base stations serving a larger number ofterminal devices across various communication cells. However, only asingle base station and two terminal devices are shown in FIG. 4 in theinterests of simplicity.

As with a conventional mobile radio network, the terminal devices 506,508 are arranged to communicate data to and from the base station(transceiver station) 504. The base station is in turn communicativelyconnected to a serving gateway, S-GW (not shown), in the core networkpart which is arranged to perform routing and management of mobilecommunications services to the terminal devices in thetelecommunications system 500 via the base station 504. In order tomaintain mobility management and connectivity, the core network part 502also includes a mobility management entity (not shown) which manages theenhanced packet service (EPS) connections with the terminal devices 506,508 operating in the communications system based on subscriberinformation stored in a home subscriber server (HSS). Other networkcomponents in the core network (also not shown for simplicity) include apolicy charging and rules function (PCRF) and a packet data networkgateway (PDN-GW) which provides a connection from the core network part502 to an external packet data network, for example the Internet. Asnoted above, the operation of the various elements of the communicationssystem 500 shown in FIG. 4 may be broadly conventional apart from wheremodified to provide functionality in accordance with embodiments of thepresent disclosure as discussed herein.

In this example, it is assumed the first terminal device 506 is aconventional smartphone-type terminal device communicating with the basestation 504 in a conventional manner (i.e. the first terminal device isa legacy terminal device that does not support EDT). It will beappreciated the first terminal device need not be a smartphone-typeterminal device and could equally be another type of legacy terminaldevice, including a device that has the capability to support EDT, butis currently not doing so. The conventional/legacy terminal device 506comprises transceiver circuitry 506 a (which may also be referred to asa transceiver/transceiver unit) for transmission and reception ofwireless signals and processor circuitry 506 b (which may also bereferred to as a processor/processor unit) configured to control thedevice 506. The processor circuitry 506 b may comprise varioussub-units/sub-circuits for providing functionality as explained furtherherein. These sub-units may be implemented as discrete hardware elementsor as appropriately configured functions of the processor circuitry.Thus the processor circuitry 506 b may comprise circuitry which issuitably configured/programmed to provide the desired functionalityusing conventional programming/configuration techniques for equipment inwireless telecommunications systems. The transceiver circuitry 506 a andthe processor circuitry 506 b are schematically shown in FIG. 4 asseparate elements for ease of representation. However, it will beappreciated that the functionality of these circuitry elements can beprovided in various different ways, for example using one or moresuitably programmed programmable computer(s), or one or more suitablyconfigured application-specific integratedcircuit(s)/circuitry/chip(s)/chipset(s). As will be appreciated thelegacy (non-EDT) terminal device 506 will in general comprise variousother elements associated with its operating functionality.

In this example, it is assumed the second terminal device 508 is amachine-type communication (MTC) terminal device 508 adapted to supportmobile terminated/downlink EDT (i.e. the second terminal device may bereferred to as an EDT terminal device/UE). In this regard, the secondterminal device 508 may be a reduced capability terminal device, forexample a terminal device able to operate on a restricted bandwidth ascompared to conventional terminal devices (i.e. what might be referredto as a narrowband device). However, it will be appreciated thisrepresents merely one specific implementation of approaches inaccordance with embodiments of the disclosure, and in other cases, thesame principles may be applied in respect of terminal devices thatsupport EDT but which are not reduced capability terminal devices, butmay, for example, comprise smartphone terminal devices, or indeed anyother form of terminal device, that may be operating in a wirelesstelecommunications system. It will be appreciated that an EDT terminaldevice may also function as a non-EDT/legacy terminal device, e.g. whenit does not want to use EDT.

The EDT terminal device 508 comprises transceiver circuitry 508 a (whichmay also be referred to as a transceiver/transceiver unit) fortransmission and reception of wireless signals and processor circuitry508 b (which may also be referred to as a processor/processor unit)configured to control the terminal device 508. The processor circuitry508 b may comprise various sub-units/sub-circuits for providing desiredfunctionality as explained further herein. These sub-units may beimplemented as discrete hardware elements or as appropriately configuredfunctions of the processor circuitry. Thus the processor circuitry 508 bmay comprise circuitry which is suitably configured/programmed toprovide the desired functionality described herein using conventionalprogramming/configuration techniques for equipment in wirelesstelecommunications systems. The transceiver circuitry 508 a and theprocessor circuitry 508 b are schematically shown in FIG. 4 as separateelements for ease of representation. However, it will be appreciatedthat the functionality of these circuitry elements can be provided invarious different ways, for example using one or more suitablyprogrammed programmable computer(s), or one or more suitably configuredapplication-specific integrated circuit(s)/circuitry/chip(s)/chipset(s).It will be appreciated the terminal device 508 will in general comprisevarious other elements associated with its operating functionality, forexample a power source, user interface, and so forth, but these are notshown in FIG. 4 in the interests of simplicity.

The base station 504 comprises transceiver circuitry 504 a (which mayalso be referred to as a transceiver/transceiver unit) for transmissionand reception of wireless signals and processor circuitry 504 b (whichmay also be referred to as a processor/processor unit) configured tocontrol the base station 504 to operate in accordance with embodimentsof the present disclosure as described herein. The processor circuitry504 b may comprise various sub-units/sub-circuits for providing desiredfunctionality as explained further herein. These sub-units may beimplemented as discrete hardware elements or as appropriately configuredfunctions of the processor circuitry. Thus the processor circuitry 504 bmay comprise circuitry which is suitably configured/programmed toprovide the desired functionality described herein using conventionalprogramming/configuration techniques for equipment in wirelesstelecommunications systems. The transceiver circuitry 504 a and theprocessor circuitry 504 b are schematically shown in FIG. 4 as separateelements for ease of representation. However, it will be appreciatedthat the functionality of these circuitry elements can be provided invarious different ways, for example using one or more suitablyprogrammed programmable computer(s), or one or more suitably configuredapplication-specific integrated circuit(s)/circuitry/chip(s)/chipset(s).It will be appreciated the base station 504 will in general comprisevarious other elements associated with its operating functionality.

Thus, the base station 504 is configured to communicate data with boththe legacy terminal device 506 and the EDT terminal device 508 accordingto an embodiment of the disclosure over respective communication links510, 512. The base station 504 is configured to communicate with thelegacy terminal device 506 over the associated radio communication link510 and with the EDT UE 508 over the associated radio communication link512 generally following the established principles of LTE-basedcommunications, apart from using modified procedures in accordance withcertain embodiments of the present disclosure as described herein.

In accordance with one aspect of certain embodiments of the disclosure,various approaches are proposed for indicating in association with apaging message when downlink EDT is to be transmitted for a terminaldevice. In accordance with another aspect of certain embodiments of thedisclosure, various approaches are proposed for what action a terminaldevice should take in response to receiving an indication that adownlink EDT is to be transmitted for the terminal device.

First Proposal for Indicating when Downlink EDT is to be Transmitted.

In a first proposal for indicating in association with a paging messagewhen downlink EDT is to be transmitted for a terminal device inaccordance with certain embodiments of the disclosure, a base station(eNB) may set a flag, which may be referred to as an EDT data flag, inthe paging message which is associated with/linked to an identifier forthe terminal device being paged to indicate downlink EDT data is to betransmitted to the terminal device. For example the flag may comprise asingle bit and may be set to a first value, e.g. “1”/“true”, when thebase station has EDT data for transmission to the terminal device, andmay be set to a second value, e.g. “0”/“false”, when the base stationdoes not have EDT data for transmission to the terminal device, butintends for the terminal device to respond to the paging message in thenormal way. Thus, when a terminal device detects its identifier (e.g.IMSI or paging ID) in a paging message (for example after receiving anddecoding the paging message in the normal way), the UE proceeds todetermine if the EDT data flag associated with an identifier is set. Ifthe EDT data flag is not set, the UE responds to the paging message inthe normal way. However, if the EDT data flag is set, the UE preparesitself for receiving/extracting the mobile terminated EDT data (MTD).The terminal device may extract the MTD according to previously proposedtechniques for downlink EDT, or in accordance with one of the approachesfor this discussed further below.

One specific example implementation of an EDT data flag is toincorporate the flag into the paging message. For example, for a pagingmessage adopting the ASN.1 structure shown in the table above, the“PagingRecord” field, which consists of a list of identities for theterminal devices being paged (typically an IMSI, but other identifierscan also be used, e.g. an S-TMSI), may be modified to include a singlebit indicator for each UE identity which infrastructure equipment, suchas the base station, can set as the EDT data (MTD) flag. For example,the relevant part of the ASN.1 paging message may be modified to includethe new field “edt-Data” providing the EDT data flag for each UEidentifier, e.g. as follows:

******************************************************************************PagingRecordList ::= SEQUENCE (SIZE (1..maxPageRec)) OF PagingRecordPagingRecord ::= SEQUENCE {  ue-Identity  PagingUE-Identity,  cn-Domain ENUMERATED {ps, cs},  ..., [[ edt-Data ::=  ENUMERATED (true) ]] }******************************************************************************

The last field in this extract from a proposed modification to the ASN.1paging message structure in accordance with certain embodiments of thedisclosure introduces the new EDT data flag for indicating whether thebase station intends to transmit EDT data to the correspondinglyidentified terminal devices.

As an alternative implementation to providing the EDT data flag as a bitfor each terminal device in the paging record, in another implementationfor a paging message adopting the ASN.1 structure, the “PagingRecord”field may remain unchanged, and instead a separate sequence (bit string)of EDT data flags is provided. For example, a terminal device indicatedin the third entry in the paging record may be configured to look at thethird bit in the sequence of EDT data flags for its own EDT data flagsetting. For example, the relevant part of the ASN.1 paging message maybe modified to include the new field “mTDFlag” providing the string ofEDT data flags for each UE identifier in the paging record, e.g. asfollows:

******************************************************************************PagingRecordList ::=  SEQUENCE (SIZE (1..maxPageRec)) OF PagingRecordPagingRecord ::=  SEQUENCE {  ue-Identity   PagingUE-Identity, cn-Domain   ENUMERATED {ps, cs},  ... } [[mTDFlag ::= BITSTRING(SIZE(1..maxPageRec)) ]]******************************************************************************

The last field in this extract from a proposed modification to the ASN.1paging message structure in accordance with certain embodiments of thedisclosure introduces the new EDT data flag (as mTDFLag sequence) forindicating whether the base station intends to transmit EDT data to thecorrespondingly identified terminal devices.

It may be noted these EDT-flag based approaches involve a modificationto the existing RRC paging message. An RRC Paging message includes thePagingRecord only if a Paged UE is in idle mode with the UE-Identitythus being received from the MME (e.g. in step S7 in FIG. 3). For aPaged UE in connected mode the base station can contact the UE directly(as it is connected to the base station). However, there are proposalsfor wireless telecommunications systems to adopt a new RRC state, whichmay be referred to as a suspend/resume RRC state. A terminal device inthe suspend/resume RRC state may, like an idle mode terminal device, besaid to be not in an active radio resource connected mode (i.e. not inthe conventional RRC Connected mode). In that sense the suspend/resumeRRC state may also be referred to as an RRC connected mode inactivestate. One characteristic that idle mode terminal devices andsuspend/resume RRC mode terminal devices share is that they are not inan active RRC Connected mode. In the suspend/resume state the terminaldevice remains in connected mode so far as the core network isconcerned, but is disconnected from the base station, and the basestation is responsible for maintaining awareness of the non-RRCconnected terminal device within its cell. A UE in this resume/suspendcase is in connected state from the core network's point of view and oneor more GTP tunnels exist between the base station and S-GW on the corenetwork. Accordingly, when there is new data for DL transmission, theS-GW will forward the data to the base station (instead of asking theMME to page the UE) using a GTP tunnel, and it is then up to the basestation to determine how to deliver the data/packet(s). In this case, anRRC Paging message may be used as discussed above, and since the IMSI isnot available in the UE context for a suspended UE at the base station,the IMSI as UE-Identity is not used, and instead the S-TMSI or a ResumeID (allocated to the terminal devices by the base station when theterminal device enters the suspended RRC state) may be used in thepaging record, along with a corresponding/linked EDT data flag.

In a DoNAS (Data over NAS) case, there is no GTP tunnel between the basestation and the S-GW in the core network and the UE's RRC state is idlein the core network. Thus the MME may send the relevant downlink userdata to the base station in association with the paging request in stepS7 in FIG. 3. In this case the base station may use the IMSI, or otherUE identifier, in a manner corresponding to that discussed above.

Second Proposal for Indicating when Downlink EDT is to be Transmitted.

In a second proposal for indicating in association with a paging messagewhen downlink EDT is to be transmitted for a terminal device inaccordance with certain embodiments of the disclosure, each EDT capableUE may be associated with a second identifier specifically forindicating it is to receive downlink EDT data, the second identifier fora UE being different to a first identifier for the UE used for normalpaging (e.g. a IMSI or S-TMSI). Thus if a base station wishes toconventionally page a UE it can use the first identifier (normal pagingidentifier) for the terminal device as the paging UE identityPagingRecord of the paging message, and if the base station wishes totransmit downlink EDT data to the terminal device, it can instead usethe second identifier (EDT identifier) for the terminal device as thepaging UE identity PagingRecord. Thus, when a terminal device detectsits first (“normal paging”) identifier (e.g. IMSI or S-TMSI) in a pagingmessage (for example after receiving and decoding the paging message inthe normal way), the UE responds to the paging message in the normalway. However, if the terminal device detects its second (“EDT”)identifier, the UE prepares itself for receiving/extracting the mobileterminated EDT data (MTD). The terminal device may extract the MTDaccording to previously proposed techniques for downlink EDT, or inaccordance with one of the approaches for this discussed further below.

Thus, whereas the first (“normal paging”) UE-identities in aPagingRecord consists of IMSI or 5-TMSI for UEs being conventionallypaged, the additional second (“EDT paging”) UE-identities comprises alist of EDT UE IDs (which could have a different length to IMSI/S-TMSI)which are to receive EDT data. The EDT UE IDs could be ASN.1 coded toindicate that they are EDT UE IDs, rather than IMSI/S-TMSI. For example,the relevant part of the ASN.1 paging message may be modified to includethe new PagingUE-Identity type “edt-UEId”, e.g. as follows:

******************************************************************************PagingUE-Identity ::= CHOICE {  s-TMSI  S-TMSI,  imsi  IMSI,  ..., edt-UEId  EDT-UEID }******************************************************************************

The last field in this extract from a proposed modification to the ASN.1paging message structure in accordance with certain embodiments of thedisclosure introduces the new edt-UEId PagingUE-Identity type for use bythe base station to indicate EDT data is to be transmitted to theterminal device.

There are various ways a terminal device may be assigned/associated witha second identifier for EDT paging (EDT UE ID) in accordance withdifferent embodiments of the disclosure.

In one approach the terminal device may be configured with an EDT UE IDwhen it first connects to the network. Thus, when the UE first connects,it will be configured to receive downlink EDT and part of thisconfiguration consists of assigning the UE an EDT UE ID. This EDT UE IDmay be unique to the UE (or group of UEs that are to receive EDT datatogether). After the UE transitions to idle mode after initiallyconnecting to the network (i.e. in a step corresponding to step S4 inFIG. 3), it monitors for paging messages at its paging occasion in theusual way, and if a paging message is received, the UE will proceed todecode the message and check whether it contains the UE's IMSI/S-TMSI(indicating the UE is being conventionally paged) or the UE's EDT UE ID(indicating the UE is being paged to receive EDT data).

FIG. 5 is a flow diagram schematically showing an example implementationof an approach for checking paging messages by a terminal device thathas been configured with an EDT UE ID, which is stored in the UE contextprior to moving to idle mode (e.g. it may be included in anRRCConnectionRelease message). When the UE receives a paging message(step A1), it checks for whether the paging record contains itsIMSI/S-TMSI (step A2), and if it finds its IMSI/S-TMSI in the pagingrecord in step A2, it will perform an RRC connection as per legacymethods, i.e. it will respond in accordance with a conventional pagingrequest (step A3). If the UE does not detect its IMSI/S-TMSI in thepaging record in step A2, the UE will then check whether its EDT UE IDis in the paging record (step A4). If the UE's EDT UE ID is not found inthe paging record in step A4, the UE will determine that it is not thepaged UE (either conventionally or for EDT data) and will go back tosleep (DRX) until the next paging occasion (step A5). However, if the UEdoes detect its configured EDT UE ID in the paging record in step A4,the UE will proceed to extract the data message transmitted usingdownlink EDT via the paging message. The terminal device may extract thedata message (MTD) according to previously proposed techniques fordownlink EDT, or in accordance with one of the approaches for thisdiscussed further below.

In another approach the terminal device may be configured with an EDT UEID when transitioning to an RRC suspend state. As noted above, there areproposals for current systems to support, in addition to conventionalRRC idle and connected modes, a Suspend and Resume feature whereby a UEstores its UE Context containing parameters such as a resume ID andsecurity keys when it is sent to idle mode. This enables the UE toresume its connection rather than performing a fresh RRC connection whenit needs to perform data exchange with the network. This feature reduceshigher layer signalling (between UE, eNB and MME). In accordance withcertain embodiments of the disclosure the scope of a suspend/resumeprocedure may be extended to include Paging with DL data (i.e. MobileTerminated EDT), and an EDT UE ID may be added as a new field in the UEContext as part of a Suspend and Resume configuration. In some exampleimplementations the EDT UE ID for a terminal device may correspond withits Resume ID. That is to say, the base station may include a terminaldevice's Resume ID in a paging record of a paging message to act as anindicator/flag that the terminal device is to receive EDT data (i.e. anMTD message). In some example implementations the EDT UE ID for aterminal device may correspond with a truncated form of its Resume ID.For example, the ResumeID may be 40 bits and may be truncated to 24 bits(according to a predefined truncating scheme) to provide the EDT UE ID.This would help reduce the size of the paging message carrying this EDTUE ID in cases where this is considered appropriate.

Third Proposal for Indicating when Downlink EDT is to be Transmitted.

In a third proposal for indicating in association with a paging messagewhen downlink EDT is to be transmitted for a terminal device inaccordance with certain embodiments of the disclosure, an indicator maybe provided in association with so-called wake-up signalling (WUS)provided in advance of a paging occasion to indicate if the pagingoccasion contains a paging message. Wake up signalling is proposed tohelp reduce power consumption associated with monitoring for pagingmassages, for example as described in C. Hambeck, et al., “A 2.4 μWWake-up Receiver for wireless sensor nodes with −71 dBm sensitivity”, inIEEE Proceeding International Symposium of Circuits and Systems (ISCAS),2011, pp. 534-537 [11]).

The proposed WUS is expected to be carried on a new physical channel andis intended to allow terminal devices to determine whether or not theyneed to actually decode PDCCH in an upcoming paging occasion. That is tosay, whereas in accordance with previously proposed techniques aterminal device decodes PDCCH during every paging occasion to determineif there is a paging message, and if so decodes PDSCH to determine ifthe paging message is addressed to the terminal device, the WUS isinstead intended to indicate to the terminal device whether or not thenext paging occasion contains a paging message that the terminal deviceshould decode. A WUS is transmitted at a pre-determined/derivable timein advance of a scheduled paging occasion such that a terminal deviceknows when to seek to receive a WUS and may contain relatively littleinformation so that it can be decoded quickly (as compared to the blinddecoding needed for PDCCH).

Thus in LTE Release 16 of the 3GPP specifications it is proposed that aPO (paging occasion) can in effect be enabled or disabled by thepresence/absence of a wake-up signal. In accordance with certainembodiments of the present disclosure, a WUS signal may be transmittedin advance of a paging occasion to indicate whether:

-   -   EDT is available in the PO    -   Conventional paging is available in the PO    -   Both EDT and conventional paging are available in the PO    -   Neither EDT nor conventional paging are available in the PO

These different indications can, for example, be provided by usingdifferent WUS sequences or cover codes for the WUS, by transmitting theWUS in different predefined time/frequency resources associated witheach possibility, or by constructing the WUS from two different basesequences (it is noted the 3GPP Release 15 eMTC WUS is constructed froma repetition of an NB-IoT WUS, and the different indications in thisexample can be formed by using two different NB-IoT sequences toindicate presence of MT EDT and/or paging). In some examples when in thebase station both EDT and conventional paging are available, the basestation may use one paging occasion in a paging time window for EDTpaging and another paging occasion in the paging time window forconventional paging.

Fourth Proposal for Indicating when Downlink EDT is to be Transmitted.

In a fourth proposal for indicating in association with a paging messagewhen downlink EDT is to be transmitted for a terminal device inaccordance with certain embodiments of the disclosure, different pagingRNTIs may be used for conventional paging and paging for EDT.

Thus in one example, the existence of MTD (EDT) within a paging occasionfor a UE is indicated using a new RNTI, i.e. EDT-RNTI, used to decodethe MPDCCH that schedules the paging message. As noted above, forconventional paging, the paging message is carried by a PDSCH which isscheduled by a DCI. This DCI is carried by an MPDCCH and the CRC of theDCI is masked with a P-RNTI (e.g. set at FFFE in hexa-decimal for thestandard defined by ETSI TS 136 321 V15.2.0 (2018-07)/3GPP TS 36.321version 15.2.0 Release 15 [8]). Terminal devices decode the DCIaddressed to P-RNTI and if their identify is included in thecorresponding paging message, they react accordingly. In accordance withcertain embodiments of the disclosure a second paging RNTI, EDT-RNTI, isused to mask the DCI for what is, in effect, a second paging messagespecifically addressed to terminal devices which are to receive EDTdata. Thus, terminal devices decode the DCI addressed to EDT-RNTI and iftheir identify is included in the corresponding paging message, theyprepare themselves for receiving a subsequent EDT data transmission. Thereception/extraction of the EDT data may be performed in accordance withpreviously proposed techniques or any of the approaches discussedfurther below.

FIG. 6 is a flow diagram schematically showing an example implementationof this approach. On detecting MPDCCH in a Paging Occasion, PO (stepB1), the UE first checks if the DCI passes the CRC check using P-RNTI asper legacy system behaviour (step B2), and if it detects a DCI withP-RNTI, the UE will read the paging message to see if it is being paged(step B3). If the UE fails to decode the DCI with P-RNTI in step B2, itwill then try to see if the EDT-RNTI passes the CRC check (step B4). Ifit passes, then the UE proceeds to extract the MTD (EDT) message (stepB5), otherwise it will consider that it failed to receive a DCI and moveback into DRX where it will monitor the next PO (step B6). The EDT-RNTImay be configured by the network or predefined by standard. The DCIaddressed to EDT-RNTI may be a legacy format DCI for paging, i.e. Format6-2 in ETSI TS 136 212 V15.1.0 (2018-03)/3GPP TS 36.212 version 15.1.0Release 15 [12] or a new DCI format. If the eNB wishes to page both alegacy UE and an EDT UE in the same paging occasion, it can either: (i)send separate paging messages, one based on P-RNTI and one based onEDT-RNTI; or (ii) default to using P-RNTI only and the legacy procedureso UEs that could have been assigned with MTD-EDT instead receive thedata via the legacy procedure.

In one example the EDT-RNTI may be common to a group of UEs or to acell. This EDT-RNTI can then be broadcast in the SIB or RRC configuredwhen the relevant UEs first connect to the network, for example it maybe included in an RRCConnectionRelease message when the respective UEstransition to idle. In this case UEs in the sub-group/cell that arecapable of DL EDT via the paging message would be able to decode the DCIscheduling the PDSCH carrying the MTD message. Here the MTD message(which may be transmitted according to one of the approaches discussedfurther below) may indicate the identity of the UE that the MTD messageis intended for. This can be done by:

-   -   Including the UE IMSI/TMSI or the EDT UE ID in a field in the        MTD message,    -   Including the UE ID in the MAC (medium access control) header of        the message.    -   The CRC of the PDSCH carrying the MTD message can be masked with        a unique ID, e.g. EDT UE ID.

A potential benefit of this example in some implementations is that onlya relatively small number of RNTIs is required which would help avoidunduly depleting the available pool of RNTIs. Another potentialadvantage of this scheme is that the UE can move to another cell and allit needs is to read the SIB of that new cell in order to determine theEDT-RNTI used in that cell in order to support DL EDT. A potentialdrawback is that another UE ID is needed to identify which UE the MTD isintended for.

In some examples, the EDT-RNTI is predefined by specifications and afixed EDT-RNTI is used for all the cells.

In some examples, the EDT-RNTI is UE specific. In this case the networkconfigures each DL EDT capable UE with a unique EDT-RNTI which the UEcan use in idle mode. A potential benefit of this example in someimplementations is that since each EDT-RNTI is unique to a UE, the DCIcan contain the DL grant for the MTD message directly. That is the DCIcould directly schedule the PDSCH carrying the MTD for the UE, e.g. itcan use DCI Format 6-1A and 6-1B [12]. A potential drawback is that anEDT-RNTI assigned to a terminal device in one cell may not be valid (ormay clash with an existing UE EDT-RNTI) when the terminal device movesto a different cell, but the network may not know when an idle modeterminal device has moved at the cell level.

Thus, in an example in which the EDT-RNTI is UE specific, the UE may beconfigured to indicate to the network when it changes cell. The networkcould then re-assign the UE EDT-RNTI and inform the MME of the locationof the UE. Hence the network would be provided with knowledge of thelocation of the UE at the cell level. This approach may, for example, beconsidered appropriate for UEs that are relatively static and so lesslikely to perform frequent cell updates with associated RRC connectionto the eNB as this can help reduce the signalling overhead.

In another example in which the EDT-RNTI is UE specific, the EDT-RNTImay provide for only partial identification of the MTD's target UE. Forexample, the DCI that schedules an MTD message could then indicatefurther identification that would provide sufficient information toidentify the UE. One example of this would be for this additional ID inthe DCI to indicate the cell that issued the EDT-RNTI, i.e. an EDT-CellID. This would allow the UE to move to another cell and still be able toidentify whether the MPDCCH detected during a PO is for it or not. Anexample is schematically shown in FIG. 7, where UE1 is initiallyconfigured by eNB1 with EDT-RNTI=5. In eNB2, another UE, i.e. UE2, isalso configured with EDT-RNTI=5. UE1 then moves from eNB1 to eNB2 andmonitors the PO in eNB2. A DL EDT is transmitted to UE1 and at thispoint the MME is unaware of the UE location and hence the MPDCCHcarrying the DCI that schedules for this DL EDT message is broadcastedin eNB1 and eNB2. Both UE1 and UE2 receive this DCI and decode it sinceits CRC is masked with the same EDT-RNTI=5. As per this example, the DCIindicates a further ID, i.e. the ID of the cell that configured theEDT-RNTI for the UE to which the DCI is targeted. Since UE2 isconfigured by eNB2 (with ID=2) UE2 will ignore the DCI message but UE1identifying that the ID=1, would read the DL grant of this DCI and getthe corresponding PDSCH for the MTD message.

Fifth Proposal for Indicating when Downlink EDT is to be Transmitted.

In another approach according to certain embodiments of the disclosure,a new field in the DCI scheduling the PDSCH containing a paging messagemay be provided to indicate that the paging message itself relates toEDT MTD. The higher layers in the UE can then process the paging messagetaking account of this additional “side” information about the pagingmessage.

For example, the existing DCI format 6-2 [12] for paging may include aflag to indicate for a UE whether a corresponding PDSCH is a MTDmessage. The existing DCI format 6-2 contains a Paging/Direct IndicationFlag, which tells the UE whether the DCI is a DL grant for a pagingmessage or it is an indication for an SI change (i.e. DirectIndication). The proposed DL EDT flag can be indicated using theseexisting flags. For example, if the Paging/Direct Indication Flag=1(i.e. the DCI is a DL Grant for a paging message), the DL EDT flag maybe indicated using an unused state, e.g. an unused Resource Assignment,or a combination of Resource Assignment, MCS, Repetition number that arenot available for use when performing legacy paging. Thus if the UEdetermines the DCI indicates an invalid combination of ResourceAssignment, MCS and Repetition number, it may conclude the Paging/DirectIndication being set to “1” is in fact an indication there is EDT datafor the terminal device. In another example, if the Paging/DirectIndication Flag=0 (i.e. the DCI is an SI change indication), there areunused bits which can be used to indicate that the DCI is for DL EDT. Inthis case, a DL grant may also be provided using these unused bits, andif remaining bits are available, a further identity to indicate the UEor group of UEs that the DL grant is for (e.g. EDT-Cell ID as per theprevious example discussed above with reference to FIG. 7) can besignalled.

The flag in the DCI could thus indicate to the UE it should decode thecorresponding paging message differently, i.e. to look for a relevantEDT UE ID or an MTD message.

Sixth Proposal for Indicating when Downlink EDT is to be Transmitted.

In another approach according to certain embodiments of the disclosure,DL EDT might only be available in only some predetermined PagingOccasions. This can help avoid a UE having to look for DL EDT in everyPO. In some implementations the predetermined POs might only contain DLEDT. When combined with aspects of the fourth proposal discussed abovein relation to using an EDT-RNTI, a DL EDT capable UE need only seek todecode the DCI using EDT-RNTI in the predetermined subset of POs,thereby helping reduce the overall blind decoding task. It will beappreciated that these POs need not contain DL EDT, for example theremay not be any DL EDT if there is no MTD from the network.

Thus in one example, the POs where DL EDT is available are apredetermined subset of the UE's conventional POs. The subset of POsavailable for DL EDT may be configured by the network e.g. it may bebroadcast in SIB (system information block signalling), or RRCconfigured when the UE is connected. Thus each UE may monitor itsconventional set of POs based on its normal paging ID (e.g. IMSI/TMSI),and in a subset of the POs, the UE may:

-   -   Also look for DL EDT using one or more of the approaches        discussed above. A schematic example of this is shown in FIG. 8        in which a UE is configured with a PO that occurs every T_(DRX)        ms, i.e. the UE DRX cycle is T_(DRX). In this example, in every        3rd PO (heavy shading as per legend) the UE will monitor for        possible DL EDT in addition to a possible (legacy) paging        message.    -   Look only for DL EDT using one or more of the approaches        discussed above. Referring again to the example timing in FIG.        8, the UE will look for DL EDT at every 3rd PO (heavy shading).

In the example of FIG. 8 the UE will not look for DL EDT in the lightshaded POs, and the network will correspondingly not seek to provide theUE with EDT data in these predetermined POs.

In another embodiment, the predetermined POs where DL EDT is availablemay be associated with a separate PO cycle, e.g., with a separate DRXcycle from that of the legacy POs for conventional paging. The separatePOs for DL EDT may be configured by the network, e.g. via SIB or UEspecific RRC signalling.

Having set out some example approaches for indicating to a terminaldevice that there is MTD data to decode in accordance with certainembodiments of the disclosure, some approaches for transmitting theMTD/DL EDT data itself are now set out in accordance with certain otherembodiments of the disclosure.

First Proposal for Transmitting MTD Data

In a first proposal, the Mobile Terminated data sent by DL EDT is in thepaging message itself. That is to say, the MTD is attached to the pagingmessage. In one example implementation, locations for the MTD in thepaging message for the different UEs may be in the same order as theorder of the indications of the UE IDs for EDT indicated in the pagingmessage. For example, the first MTD sent by DL EDT may correspond to thefirst indicated UE ID in the paging message, and so on. In anotherexample implementation, a UE ID (indicating the UE to which the MTD DLEDT message is addressed) may be contained within the MTD DL EDT messageitself (in this example, all UEs that are capable of receiving MTD DLEDT may parse the received MTD DL EDT messages, but a UE will only acton an MTD DL EDT message if it contains an indication of its own UE ID).

In another example, the paging message may contains a maximum of a oneMTD message sent by DL EDT. If at any one time instance (e.g. at any onepaging occasion), more than one UE needs to be sent MTD, the basestation may revert to the use of legacy procedures (e.g. the legacyPRACH procedure and transmission of DL data within an RRC connection)for one or both UEs. This approach can help simplify the signallingstructure and procedures associated with a paging message that supportsMTD by DL EDT.

It may be noted that there may in some respects be an element ofinefficiency in transmitting the MTD in a paging message in someimplementations since the paging message is typically sent in multiplecells comprising a tracking area. However, there are various approachesthat can help mitigate against this if it is considered a concern for agiven implementation. For example, in one approach MTD via paging mayonly be sent, at least initially, in the cell to which the UE was lastattached. If the MTD is not successfully transmitted to the UE in thiscell, the UE may then be paged (as per legacy procedures) in the othercells in the tracking area, and the DL data is sent to the UE usinglegacy procedures. In another approach, when the network is lightlyloaded in terms of paging, MTD via paging may be used, and when thepaging load is higher, legacy procedures may be used.

Second Proposal for Transmitting MTD Data

In some examples, the Mobile Terminated data sent by DL EDT may be in aseparate PDSCH (i.e. separate from the PDSCH carrying the pagingmessage). That is to say, the MTD may be transmitted using a separatePDSCH to that including the paging record. Separating the MTD from thepaging message can in some cases help reduce or maintain the size of thepaging message (compared to approaches involving appending the MTD tothe paging message itself). This can, in some cases, be beneficial forUEs in coverage enhancement since it may require fewer repetitions(noting that the paging message is typically sent at a number ofrepetitions that is sufficient to reach UEs in the worst coverageconditions). There are several approaches for the Mobile Terminated datato be sent in a separate PDSCH.

In a first approach a DL resource grant for the MTD PDSCH is explicitlyindicated in the paging message. An example of this is schematicallyrepresented in FIG. 9 which schematically indicates a logicalrepresentation of elements of a paging message according to theabove-discussed first proposal for indicating when downlink EDT is to betransmitted in which the paging record is accompanied by a sequence ofEDT flags in what is referred to above as an mTDFlag sequence and isreferred to in FIG. 9 as a DL EDT indicator. Thus in the example of FIG.9 the paging record in the paging message includes three UE identifiers,IMSI #1, IMSI #2 and IMSI #3, and three corresponding EDT indicatorflags, FLAG #1, FLAG #2 and FLAG #3. In this case the UE identified byIMSI #2 is being conventionally paged (i.e. FLAG #2=0), whereas the UEsidentified by IMSI #1 and IMSI #3 are being paged for DL EDT (i.e. FLAG#1=1 and FLAG #3=1). Thus in this example the paging message furtherincludes two explicit indications of resource allocation for the EDTdata for the UEs identified by IMSI #1 and IMSI #3 respectively,indicated in FIG. 9 as DL Grant #1 and DL Grant #3. In this example DLGrant #1 identifies PDSCH resources PDSCH #1 for the UE associated withIMSI #1 to receive its MTD data MTD #1 and DL Grant #3 identifies PDSCHresources PDSCH #3 for the UE associated with IMSI #3 to receive its MTDdata MTD #3. Each UE that is flagged to receive DL EDT data candetermine its resource grant from the ordering of the DL Grant entries.For example, a UE knows its position in the list of UEs referred to inthe paging message from the paging record, and can “count” how manypreceding UEs are expecting to receive an explicit downlink grant fromthe values of their EDT indicator flags, and so determine the locationof its own DL grant in the sequence of explicit DL grants in the pagingmessage.

In a second approach a DL resource grant for the MTD PDSCH is implicitlyindicated in the paging message. An example of this is schematicallyrepresented in FIG. 10 which schematically indicates a logicalrepresentation of elements of a paging message according to theabove-discussed first proposal for indicating when downlink EDT is to betransmitted in which the paging record is accompanied by a sequence ofEDT flags in what is referred to above as an mTDFlag sequence and isreferred to in FIG. 10 as a DL EDT indicator. Thus in the example ofFIG. 10 (as in FIG. 9) the paging record in the paging message includesthree UE identifiers, IMSI #1, IMSI #2 and IMSI #3, and threecorresponding EDT indicator flags, FLAG #1, FLAG #2 and FLAG #3. In thiscase the UE identified by IMSI #2 is being conventionally paged (i.e.FLAG #2=0), whereas the UEs identified by IMSI #1 and IMSI #3 are beingpaged for DL EDT (i.e. FLAG #1=1 and FLAG #3=1). As schematicallyrepresented in FIG. 10, the paging message implicitly identifies PDSCHresources PDSCH #1 for the UE associated with IMSI #1 to receive its MTDdata MTD #1 and PDSCH resources PDSCH #3 for the UE associated with IMSI#3 to receive its MTD data MTD #3. There are a number of different waysfor providing/deriving the implicit resource allocations. For example,different positions for terminal devices in the paging record list(which might be counted with or without including UEs which are notindicated to receive EDT) may be associated with differentpredetermined/derivable resource allocations, e.g. on predefinedfrequency resources and offset in time by a predefined time from thetime of the paging message, using a predefined MCS (modulation andcoding scheme). The mapping to predetermined resources for the DL EDTgrant and identification of the MCS could be defined by an operatingstandard for the wireless telecommunications system, or networkconfigured, for example in association with the terminal device beingconfigured for EDT operation when it first attaches to the network.

In a third approach a DL resource grant for the MTD PDSCH is scheduledby a DL grant carried by a separate DCI. The PDCCH search space carryingthis DCI may, for example, be an existing common search space (e.g.corresponding to that used to schedule RAR and Message 4 in steps T3 andT5 of FIG. 2 respectively), or another configured search space.Alternatively, the location of the PDCCH search space can be implicitlyindicated by the location of the UE's identifier in the paging record ina manner corresponding to that discussed above for the implicitindication of the resource grant for MTD. An example of this isschematically represented in FIG. 11 which schematically indicates alogical representation of elements of a paging message according to theabove-discussed first proposal for indicating when downlink EDT is to betransmitted in which the paging record is accompanied by a sequence ofEDT flags in what is referred to above as an mTDFlag sequence and isreferred to in FIG. 11 as a DL EDT indicator. Thus in the example ofFIG. 11 (as in FIGS. 9 an 10) the paging record in the paging messageincludes three UE identifiers, IMSI #1, IMSI #2 and IMSI #3, and threecorresponding EDT indicator flags, FLAG #1, FLAG #2 and FLAG #3. In thiscase the UE identified by IMSI #2 is being conventionally paged (i.e.FLAG #2=0), whereas the UEs identified by IMSI #1 and IMSI #3 are beingpaged for DL EDT (i.e. FLAG #1=1 and FLAG #3=1). As schematicallyrepresented in FIG. 11, the paging message implicitly identifies MPDCCHresources MPDCCH #1 for the UE associated with IMSI #1 to receive DCI #1indicating PDSCH resources PDSCH #1 for its MTD data MTD #1, andimplicitly identifies MPDCCH resources MPDCCH #3 for the UE associatedwith IMSI #3 to receive DCI #3 indicating PDSCH resources PDSCH #3 forits MTD data MTD #3. There are a number of different ways forproviding/deriving the implicit pointers to where to receive the DCIscheduling the MTD data. For example, by using a predetermined searchspace for where the PDCCH carrying the relevant DCI can be found (viablind decoding).

Having set out some example approaches for indicating to a terminaldevice that there is MTD data to decode and for communicating MTD datain accordance with certain embodiments of the disclosure, someapproaches for how a terminal device might react to receiving MTD datain different circumstances are now set out in accordance with certainother embodiments of the disclosure.

In one example, a UE having received MTD data in accordance with theprinciples discussed herein may be configured not to continue/completethe RACH and RRC connection procedure upon receiving the MTD message.The configuration of this may be dependent on an indication receivedfrom the base station, e.g. in SIB, to inform the terminal device that aRACH is not required when it receives MTD data.

In another example, when a UE receives an MTD message via the pagingmessage (or more generally at the paging stage) as discussed herein, thenetwork may also indicate to the UE that it should also continue toperform an RRC connection. One example approach for implementing thiswill be for the paging message to include both an IMSI (or S-TMSI) forthe terminal device and its EDT UE ID in the paging message. In thisscenario the UE may have been configured to search for both IDs, and ifboth IDs are detected, the terminal device may continue to perform RRCconnection after receiving an MTD message.

In another example, in addition to receiving the downlink MTD messageduring the paging stage, the terminal device may also be requested bythe network to transmit uplink EDT data in association with Message 3,for example in accordance with previously proposed techniques for uplinkEDT.

FIG. 12 is a flow diagram schematically representing a method ofoperating a terminal device for receiving user plane data from a networkinfrastructure equipment in a wireless telecommunications network whenthe terminal device is not in an active radio resource connected mode.In the first step of the process represented in FIG. 12 the terminaldevice receives paging message signalling from the networkinfrastructure equipment, wherein the paging message signallingcomprises an indication the network infrastructure equipment has userplane data for transmission to the terminal device while the terminaldevice is not in an active radio resource connected mode. In the secondstep of the process represented in FIG. 12 the terminal devicedetermines from the paging message signalling a set of radio resourceson which the user plane data is to be transmitted by the networkinfrastructure equipment to the terminal device. In the third step ofthe process represented in FIG. 12 the terminal device receives the userplane data from the network infrastructure equipment using thedetermined set of radio resources while the terminal device is not in anactive radio resource connected mode.

FIG. 13 is a flow diagram schematically representing a method ofoperating network infrastructure equipment for transmitting user planedata to a terminal device in a wireless telecommunications network whenthe terminal device is not in an active radio resource connected mode.In the first step of the process represented in FIG. 13 the networkinfrastructure equipment transmits paging message signalling to theterminal device, wherein the paging message signalling comprises anindication the network infrastructure equipment has user plane data fortransmission to the terminal device while the terminal device is not inan active radio resource connected mode and an indication of a set ofradio resources on which the user plane data is to be transmitted by thenetwork infrastructure equipment to the terminal device. In the secondstep of the process represented in FIG. 13 the network infrastructureequipment transmits the user plane data from the network infrastructureequipment using the indicated set of radio resources while the terminaldevice is not in an active radio resource connected mode.

Thus there has been described a method of operating a terminal device toreceive user plane data from a network infrastructure equipment in awireless telecommunications network when the terminal device is not inan active radio resource connected mode, the method comprising:receiving paging message signalling from the network infrastructureequipment, wherein the paging message signalling comprises an indicationthe network infrastructure equipment has user plane data fortransmission to the terminal device while the terminal device is not inan active radio resource connected mode; determining from the pagingmessage signalling a set of radio resources on which the user plane datais to be transmitted by the network infrastructure equipment to theterminal device; and receiving the user plane data from the networkinfrastructure equipment using the determined set of radio resourceswhile the terminal device is not in an active radio resource connectedmode.

In some implementations the paging signalling may comprise an indicationthe network infrastructure equipment has user plane data fortransmission to the terminal device while the terminal device is not inan active radio resource connected mode, but the UE might not determinefrom the paging signalling a set of radio resources on which the userplane data is to be transmitted by the network infrastructure equipmentto the terminal device. In other implementations, the paging signallingmight not comprise an indication the network infrastructure equipmenthas user plane data for transmission to the terminal device while theterminal device is not in an active radio resource connected mode, butthe UE might determine from the paging signalling a set of radioresources on which user plane data is to be transmitted by the networkinfrastructure equipment to the terminal device.

It will be appreciated that while the present disclosure has in somerespects focused on implementations in an LTE-based and/or 5G networkfor the sake of providing specific examples, the same principles can beapplied to other wireless telecommunications systems. Thus, even thoughthe terminology used herein is generally the same or similar to that ofthe LTE and 5G standards, the teachings are not limited to the presentversions of LTE and 5G and could apply equally to any appropriatearrangement not based on LTE or 5G and/or compliant with any otherfuture version of an LTE, 5G or other standard.

It will also be appreciated that while the above-described embodimentshave in some respects focused on various steps being performed from theperspective of the terminal device, for example receiving variousindications and data, it will be appreciated for each of the approachesdescribed herein the terminal device and the network (e.g. base stationor other network infrastructure equipment) each perform directlycorresponding steps. For example when the terminal device is said toreceive data from the base station, this should also be interpreted asthe base station transmitting the data to the terminal device. Asanother example, it will be appreciated that references to the terminaldevice locating certain signalling on certain predefined resourcescorresponds with the base station transmitting the signalling on thepredefined resources.

It may be noted various example approaches discussed herein may rely oninformation which is predetermined/predefined in the sense of beingknown by both the base station and the terminal device. It will beappreciated such predetermined/predefined information may in general beestablished, for example, by definition in an operating standard for thewireless telecommunication system, or in previously exchanged signallingbetween the base station and terminal devices, for example in systeminformation signalling, or in association with radio resource controlsetup signalling, or in information stored on a SIM card. That is tosay, the specific manner in which the relevant predefined information isestablished and shared between the various elements of the wirelesstelecommunications system is not of primary significance to theprinciples of operation described herein. It may further be notedvarious example approaches discussed herein rely on information which isexchanged/communicated between various elements of the wirelesstelecommunications system and it will be appreciated such communicationsmay in general be made in accordance with conventional techniques, forexample in terms of specific signalling protocols and the type ofcommunication channel used, unless the context demands otherwise. Thatis to say, the specific manner in which the relevant information isexchanged between the various elements of the wirelesstelecommunications system is not of primary significance to theprinciples of operation described herein.

It will be appreciated that the principles described herein are notapplicable only to certain types of terminal device, but can be appliedmore generally in respect of any types of terminal device, for examplethe approaches are not limited to machine type communication devices/IoTdevices or other narrowband terminal devices, but can be applied moregenerally, for example in respect of any type of terminal deviceoperating with a wireless link to the communication network.

Further particular and preferred aspects of the present invention areset out in the accompanying independent and dependent claims. It will beappreciated that features of the dependent claims may be combined withfeatures of the independent claims in combinations other than thoseexplicitly set out in the claims.

Thus, the foregoing discussion discloses and describes merely exemplaryembodiments of the present invention. As will be understood by thoseskilled in the art, the present invention may be embodied in otherspecific forms without departing from the spirit or essentialcharacteristics thereof. Accordingly, the disclosure of the presentinvention is intended to be illustrative, but not limiting of the scopeof the invention, as well as other claims. The disclosure, including anyreadily discernible variants of the teachings herein, define, in part,the scope of the foregoing claim terminology such that no inventivesubject matter is dedicated to the public.

Respective features of the present disclosure are defined by thefollowing numbered paragraphs:

Paragraph 1. A method of operating a terminal device for receiving userplane data from a network infrastructure equipment in a wirelesstelecommunications network when the terminal device is not in an activeradio resource connected mode, the method comprising: receiving pagingsignalling from the network infrastructure equipment, wherein the pagingsignalling comprises an indication the network infrastructure equipmenthas user plane data for transmission to the terminal device while theterminal device is not in an active radio resource connected mode;determining from the paging signalling a set of radio resources on whichthe user plane data is to be transmitted by the network infrastructureequipment to the terminal device; and receiving the user plane data fromthe network infrastructure equipment using the determined set of radioresources while the terminal device is not in an active radio resourceconnected mode.

Paragraph 2. The method of paragraph 1, wherein the paging signallingcomprises a paging message, and wherein the paging message comprises anidentifier for the terminal device and the indication the networkinfrastructure equipment has user plane data for transmission to theterminal device, wherein the indication the network infrastructureequipment has user plane data for transmission to the terminal devicecomprises a setting for a flag associated with the identifier for theterminal device.

Paragraph 3. The method of paragraph 1 or 2, wherein the terminal deviceis associated with a first identifier and a second identifier, whereinthe first identifier is used by the network to page the terminal deviceto cause the terminal device to transition to an active radio resourceconnected mode, and wherein the paging signalling comprises anindication of the second identifier for the terminal device to providethe indication the network infrastructure equipment has user plane datafor transmission to the terminal device while the terminal device is notin an active radio resource connected mode.

Paragraph 4. The method of paragraph 3, wherein at least one of thefirst identifier and the second identifier are specific to the terminaldevice.

Paragraph 5. The method of paragraph 3 or 4, wherein the firstidentifier is a first paging radio network temporary identifier commonto a plurality of terminal devices in the wireless telecommunicationsnetwork and the second identifier is a second paging radio networktemporary identifier for the terminal device.

Paragraph 6. The method of paragraph 5, wherein the second paging radionetwork temporary identifier for the terminal device comprises a firstpart assigned to the terminal device by a network infrastructureequipment and a second part that identifies the network infrastructureequipment that assigned the first part to the terminal device.

Paragraph 7. The method of any of paragraphs 3 to 6, wherein the pagingsignalling comprises a paging message, and wherein the indication of thesecond identifier is provided in a paging record of the paging message.

Paragraph 8. The method of any of paragraphs 3 to 7, wherein the pagingsignalling comprises downlink control signalling for allocatingtransmission resources for a paging message, and wherein the indicationof the second identifier is provided in the downlink control signalling.

Paragraph 9. The method of any of paragraphs 3 to 8, wherein the secondidentifier is assigned to the terminal device in radio resource controlsignalling.

Paragraph 10. The method of any of paragraphs 1 to 9, wherein the pagingsignalling comprises downlink control signalling for allocatingtransmission resources for a paging message, wherein the downlinkcontrol signalling is associated with a first format and a secondformat, wherein the first format is used by the network to page theterminal device to cause the terminal device to transition to an activeradio resource connected mode, and wherein the downlink controlsignalling comprises the second format to provide the indication thenetwork infrastructure equipment has user plane data for transmission tothe terminal device while the terminal device is not in an active radioresource connected mode.

Paragraph 11. The method of any of paragraphs 1 to 10, wherein thepaging signalling comprises wake up signalling and a paging message,wherein the wake up signalling is received by the terminal device inadvance of a scheduled time for the paging message, and wherein theindication the network infrastructure equipment has user plane data fortransmission to the terminal device is provided by a selectablecharacteristic of the wake up signalling meeting a predefined criterionfor indicating the network infrastructure equipment has user plane datafor transmission to the terminal device.

Paragraph 12. The method of paragraph 11, wherein the selectablecharacteristic of the wake up signalling comprises one or more of: aselected signalling sequence for the wake up signalling; a selectedgrouping of two or more signalling sequences for the wake up signalling;selected time resources for the wake up signalling; and selectedfrequency resources for the wake up signalling.

Paragraph 13. The method of any of paragraphs 1 to 12, wherein thepaging signalling comprises a paging message transmitted by the networkinfrastructure equipment in a selected one of a plurality of potentialpaging occasions, and wherein the indication the network infrastructureequipment has user plane data for transmission to the terminal device isprovided by the paging message being transmitted in one of a predefinedsubset of the potential paging occasions.

Paragraph 14. The method of paragraph 13, wherein the predefined subsetof the potential paging occasions does not overlap with potential pagingoccasions for paging the terminal device to cause the terminal device totransition to an active radio resource connected mode.

Paragraph 15. The method of any of paragraphs 1 to 14, wherein thepaging signalling comprises a paging message and the user plane data isreceived from the network infrastructure equipment on radio resourcescomprising the paging message.

Paragraph 16. The method of any of paragraphs 1 to 15, wherein thepaging signalling comprises an explicit indication of the set of radioresources on which the user plane data is to be transmitted by thenetwork infrastructure equipment.

Paragraph 17. The method of any of paragraphs 1 to 15, wherein thepaging signalling comprises an implicit indication of the set of radioresources on which the user plane data is to be transmitted by thenetwork infrastructure equipment.

Paragraph 18. The method of paragraph 17, wherein the paging signallingcomprises a paging message and the terminal device derives the set ofradio resources on which the user plane data is to be transmitted by thenetwork infrastructure equipment based on the position of the terminaldevice in a list of terminal devices identified in the paging message.

Paragraph 19. The method of paragraph 17 or 18, wherein the terminaldevice receives the user plane data from the network infrastructureequipment using the determined set of radio resources in accordance witha predefined coding scheme.

Paragraph 20. The method of any of paragraphs 1 to 19, wherein thepaging signalling comprises an indication of radio resources fordownlink control information to be transmitted by the networkinfrastructure equipment, and wherein the downlink control informationprovides an indication of the set of radio resources on which the userplane data is to be transmitted by the network infrastructure equipment.

Paragraph 21. The method of any of paragraphs 1 to 20, furthercomprising the terminal device determining it should terminate a randomaccess procedure after receiving the user plane data from the networkinfrastructure equipment.

Paragraph 22. The method of any of paragraphs 1 to 20, furthercomprising the terminal device determining it should complete a randomaccess procedure to move to an active radio resource connected modeafter receiving the user plane data from the network infrastructureequipment using the determined set of radio resources.

Paragraph 23. The method of any of paragraphs 1 to 22, furthercomprising the terminal device transmitting uplink user plane data tothe network infrastructure equipment while the terminal device is not inan active radio resource connected mode.

Paragraph 24. A terminal device for receiving user plane data from anetwork infrastructure equipment in a wireless telecommunicationsnetwork when the terminal device is not in an active radio resourceconnected mode, wherein the terminal device comprises controllercircuitry and transceiver circuitry configured such that the terminaldevice is operable to: receive paging signalling from the networkinfrastructure equipment, wherein the paging signalling comprises anindication the network infrastructure equipment has user plane data fortransmission to the terminal device while the terminal device is not inan active radio resource connected mode; determine from the pagingsignalling a set of radio resources on which the user plane data is tobe transmitted by the network infrastructure equipment to the terminaldevice; and receive the user plane data from the network infrastructureequipment using the determined set of radio resources while the terminaldevice is not in an active radio resource connected mode.

Paragraph 25. Integrated circuitry for a terminal device for receivinguser plane data from a network infrastructure equipment in a wirelesstelecommunications network when the terminal device is not in an activeradio resource connected mode, wherein the integrated circuitrycomprises controller circuitry and transceiver circuitry configured tooperate together such that the terminal device is operable to: receivepaging signalling from the network infrastructure equipment, wherein thepaging signalling comprises an indication the network infrastructureequipment has user plane data for transmission to the terminal devicewhile the terminal device is not in an active radio resource connectedmode; determine from the paging signalling a set of radio resources onwhich the user plane data is to be transmitted by the networkinfrastructure equipment to the terminal device; and receive the userplane data from the network infrastructure equipment using thedetermined set of radio resources while the terminal device is not in anactive radio resource connected mode.

Paragraph 26. A method of operating network infrastructure equipment fortransmitting user plane data to a terminal device in a wirelesstelecommunications network when the terminal device is not in an activeradio resource connected mode, the method comprising: transmittingpaging signalling to the terminal device, wherein the paging signallingcomprises an indication the network infrastructure equipment has userplane data for transmission to the terminal device while the terminaldevice is not in an active radio resource connected mode and anindication of a set of radio resources on which the user plane data isto be transmitted by the network infrastructure equipment to theterminal device; and transmitting the user plane data from the networkinfrastructure equipment using the indicated set of radio resourceswhile the terminal device is not in an active radio resource connectedmode.

Paragraph 27. The method of paragraph 26, further comprising the networkinfrastructure equipment determining the user plane data is to betransmitted to the terminal device while the terminal device is not inan active radio resource connected mode based on the networkinfrastructure equipment determining it does not need to transmit userplane data to any other terminal devices while they are not in an activeradio resource connected mode at the same time as transmitting the userplane data to the terminal device while it is not in an active radioresource connected mode.

Paragraph 28. Network infrastructure equipment for transmitting userplane data to a terminal device in a wireless telecommunications networkwhen the terminal device is not in an active radio resource connectedmode, wherein the network infrastructure equipment comprises controllercircuitry and transceiver circuitry configured such that the networkinfrastructure equipment is operable to: transmit paging signalling tothe terminal device, wherein the paging signalling comprises anindication the network infrastructure equipment has user plane data fortransmission to the terminal device while the terminal device is not inan active radio resource connected mode and an indication of a set ofradio resources on which the user plane data is to be transmitted by thenetwork infrastructure equipment to the terminal device; and transmitthe user plane data from the network infrastructure equipment using theindicated set of radio resources while the terminal device is not in anactive radio resource connected mode.

Paragraph 29. Integrated circuitry for network infrastructure equipmentfor, transmitting user plane data to a terminal device in a wirelesstelecommunications network when the terminal device is not in an activeradio resource connected mode, wherein the integrated circuitrycomprises controller circuitry and transceiver circuitry configured tooperate together such that the network infrastructure equipment isoperable to: transmit paging signalling to the terminal device, whereinthe paging signalling comprises an indication the network infrastructureequipment has user plane data for transmission to the terminal devicewhile the terminal device is not in an active radio resource connectedmode and an indication of a set of radio resources on which the userplane data is to be transmitted by the network infrastructure equipmentto the terminal device; and transmit the user plane data from thenetwork infrastructure equipment using the indicated set of radioresources while the terminal device is not in an active radio resourceconnected mode.

REFERENCES

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1. A method of operating a terminal device for receiving user plane datafrom a network infrastructure equipment in a wireless telecommunicationsnetwork when the terminal device is not in an active radio resourceconnected mode, the method comprising: receiving paging signalling fromthe network infrastructure equipment, wherein the paging signallingcomprises an indication the network infrastructure equipment has userplane data for transmission to the terminal device while the terminaldevice is not in an active radio resource connected mode; determiningfrom the paging signalling a set of radio resources on which the userplane data is to be transmitted by the network infrastructure equipmentto the terminal device; and receiving the user plane data from thenetwork infrastructure equipment using the determined set of radioresources while the terminal device is not in an active radio resourceconnected mode.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the paging signallingcomprises a paging message, and wherein the paging message comprises anidentifier for the terminal device and the indication the networkinfrastructure equipment has user plane data for transmission to theterminal device, wherein the indication the network infrastructureequipment has user plane data for transmission to the terminal devicecomprises a setting for a flag associated with the identifier for theterminal device.
 3. The method of claim 1, wherein the terminal deviceis associated with a first identifier and a second identifier, whereinthe first identifier is used by the network to page the terminal deviceto cause the terminal device to transition to an active radio resourceconnected mode, and wherein the paging signalling comprises anindication of the second identifier for the terminal device to providethe indication the network infrastructure equipment has user plane datafor transmission to the terminal device while the terminal device is notin an active radio resource connected mode.
 4. The method of claim 3,wherein at least one of the first identifier and the second identifierare specific to the terminal device.
 5. The method of claim 3, whereinthe first identifier is a first paging radio network temporaryidentifier common to a plurality of terminal devices in the wirelesstelecommunications network and the second identifier is a second pagingradio network temporary identifier for the terminal device.
 6. Themethod of claim 5, wherein the second paging radio network temporaryidentifier for the terminal device comprises a first part assigned tothe terminal device by a network infrastructure equipment and a secondpart that identifies the network infrastructure equipment that assignedthe first part to the terminal device.
 7. The method of claim 3, whereinthe paging signalling comprises a paging message, and wherein theindication of the second identifier is provided in a paging record ofthe paging message.
 8. The method of claim 3, wherein the pagingsignalling comprises downlink control signalling for allocatingtransmission resources for a paging message, and wherein the indicationof the second identifier is provided in the downlink control signalling.9. The method of claim 3, wherein the second identifier is assigned tothe terminal device in radio resource control signalling.
 10. The methodof claim 1, wherein the paging signalling comprises downlink controlsignalling for allocating transmission resources for a paging message,wherein the downlink control signalling is associated with a firstformat and a second format, wherein the first format is used by thenetwork to page the terminal device to cause the terminal device totransition to an active radio resource connected mode, and wherein thedownlink control signalling comprises the second format to provide theindication the network infrastructure equipment has user plane data fortransmission to the terminal device while the terminal device is not inan active radio resource connected mode.
 11. The method of claim 1,wherein the paging signalling comprises wake up signalling and a pagingmessage, wherein the wake up signalling is received by the terminaldevice in advance of a scheduled time for the paging message, andwherein the indication the network infrastructure equipment has userplane data for transmission to the terminal device is provided by aselectable characteristic of the wake up signalling meeting a predefinedcriterion for indicating the network infrastructure equipment has userplane data for transmission to the terminal device.
 12. (canceled) 13.The method of claim 1, wherein the paging signalling comprises a pagingmessage transmitted by the network infrastructure equipment in aselected one of a plurality of potential paging occasions, and whereinthe indication the network infrastructure equipment has user plane datafor transmission to the terminal device is provided by the pagingmessage being transmitted in one of a predefined subset of the potentialpaging occasions.
 14. The method of claim 13, wherein the predefinedsubset of the potential paging occasions does not overlap with potentialpaging occasions for paging the terminal device to cause the terminaldevice to transition to an active radio resource connected mode.
 15. Themethod of claim 1, wherein the paging signalling comprises a pagingmessage and the user plane data is received from the networkinfrastructure equipment on radio resources comprising the pagingmessage.
 16. The method of claim 1, wherein the paging signallingcomprises an explicit indication of the set of radio resources on whichthe user plane data is to be transmitted by the network infrastructureequipment.
 17. The method of claim 1, wherein the paging signallingcomprises an implicit indication of the set of radio resources on whichthe user plane data is to be transmitted by the network infrastructureequipment. 18.-19. (canceled)
 20. The method of claim 1, wherein thepaging signalling comprises an indication of radio resources fordownlink control information to be transmitted by the networkinfrastructure equipment, and wherein the downlink control informationprovides an indication of the set of radio resources on which the userplane data is to be transmitted by the network infrastructure equipment.21.-23. (canceled)
 24. A terminal device for receiving user plane datafrom a network infrastructure equipment in a wireless telecommunicationsnetwork when the terminal device is not in an active radio resourceconnected mode, wherein the terminal device comprises controllercircuitry and transceiver circuitry configured such that the terminaldevice is operable to: receive paging signalling from the networkinfrastructure equipment, wherein the paging signalling comprises anindication the network infrastructure equipment has user plane data fortransmission to the terminal device while the terminal device is not inan active radio resource connected mode; determine from the pagingsignalling a set of radio resources on which the user plane data is tobe transmitted by the network infrastructure equipment to the terminaldevice; and receive the user plane data from the network infrastructureequipment using the determined set of radio resources while the terminaldevice is not in an active radio resource connected mode.
 25. (canceled)26. A method of operating network infrastructure equipment fortransmitting user plane data to a terminal device in a wirelesstelecommunications network when the terminal device is not in an activeradio resource connected mode, the method comprising: transmittingpaging signalling to the terminal device, wherein the paging signallingcomprises an indication the network infrastructure equipment has userplane data for transmission to the terminal device while the terminaldevice is not in an active radio resource connected mode and anindication of a set of radio resources on which the user plane data isto be transmitted by the network infrastructure equipment to theterminal device; and transmitting the user plane data from the networkinfrastructure equipment using the indicated set of radio resourceswhile the terminal device is not in an active radio resource connectedmode.
 27. The method of claim 26, further comprising the networkinfrastructure equipment determining the user plane data is to betransmitted to the terminal device while the terminal device is not inan active radio resource connected mode based on the networkinfrastructure equipment determining it does not need to transmit userplane data to any other terminal devices while they are not in an activeradio resource connected mode at the same time as transmitting the userplane data to the terminal device while it is not in an active radioresource connected mode. 28.-29. (canceled)